Showing posts with label university. Show all posts
Showing posts with label university. Show all posts

Wednesday, 6 June 2018

Do College Students Need the Campus Health Plan?


If you’re packing a child off to college this summer, the extra-long sheets and shower caddies can wait. Health insurance should be at the top of your to-do list.

Many private colleges and public universities require full-time residential students to have health insurance, and some aggressively market their own plans, automatically enrolling incoming students in their insurance plan and adding the premium — which can be several thousand dollars a year — to the tuition bill. If you don’t need it and want to get the charge removed, you must meet the college’s early and often rather arbitrary deadline for proving your child is adequately insured and obtaining a waiver. (This is not a one-and-done, by the way. You must obtain the waiver every year.) Policies vary by school. Some, like the University of Michigan, make health insurance mandatory for foreign students but not for domestic students.
If you’re lucky enough to have an employer-provided family health plan, most experts recommend keeping your child on it. Dependents can be covered on a family plan until age 26 under the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare; it’s one of the few components of the A.C.A. that has strong bipartisan support. But no matter how your kids are insured, you’ll need to do some fact-finding to make sure they can get access to health care services in their college town and figure out how much it might end up costing you.
When we packed our oldest daughter off to college, we obtained the waiver but worried. Our family’s employer-provided health plan was excellent, but the university — which was promoting its student health insurance plan — warned us that the health center on campus did not participate in any insurance networks other than the university’s own plan. As a health writer, I knew that meant we could be stuck with some pretty steep bills.

We briefly considered switching to a different plan with a larger network of doctors in the college town — and finally started making phone calls and asking questions. What we found out was that it didn’t really matter what insurance our child had: Full-time students could go to the university health center for primary care services for a $10 co-payment, just by virtue of being students. (The service was covered by a mandatory student activity fee.)
Every university can craft its own policies, but many colleges and universities have clinics that provide primary care services to students, often at nominal prices or even free, according to College Parents of America, a group that promotes completing college, and American College Health Association, a nonprofit association of college health professionals. The clinics often provide student basics like contraception and mental health counseling. But you still need comprehensive insurance for big-ticket items like hospital stays, surgery or more serious illnesses.
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Friday, 29 September 2017

Harvard Tops The US College Ranking for 2017/18. See the full list.


Harvard University has topped a ranking of US universities and colleges that is fuelled by data from Times Higher Education.
The Ivy League university jumps one place to take the top spot in the second annual edition of the Wall Street Journal/Times Higher Education College Rankings, while last year’s leader Stanford University drops down to joint third. 

The top 10 is completed by Duke University, Yale University, the California Institute of Technology, the University of Pennsylvania, Princeton University and Cornell University.Columbia University climbs three places to second place, while the Massachusetts Institute of Technology holds in joint third place.
Unlike the THE World University Rankings, which focus on universities’ research performance, the US table measures institutions’ student engagement, student outcomes and learning environments.
This year, Harvard achieved higher scores for engagement, which measures how well students engaged with learning and interacted with their teachers and peers, as well as environment, which looks at the diversity of the student body and faculty.
In contrast, Stanford achieved lower scores in the resources pillar, which measures finance per student, faculty per student and research papers per faculty, and the outcomes pillar, which includes metrics on the graduation rate and the value added by the teaching at a college to graduate salary and to graduates’ ability to repay student debt.
The last is a new metric that was not included in last year’s ranking and this alters the weighting of the other outcomes indicators, but otherwise the methodology is largely the same as last year.
Caltech is the only newcomer to the top 10, joining in seventh place, up from 12th last year. In contrast, Northwestern University has fallen from 10th place to joint 15th.
Meanwhile, the University of California, Los Angeles is the top public university in 25th place, up from 28th. It overtakes the University of Michigan, which falls five places to 27th.
UCLA achieved a slightly higher score on engagement, while Michigan was hurt by a drop in its resources and outcomes scores.
The US ranking includes the results of the THE US Student Survey, which gathered the views of more than 200,000 current university students in 2016 and 2017 to find out about their engagement with their studies, their interaction with their teachers and their satisfaction with their experience.  
It also draws on the THE Academic Reputation Survey, in order to determine which institutions have the best reputation for excellence in teaching.
A full analysis of the results of the WSJ/THE US College Rankings will be published in THE on 19 October.

WSJ/THE College Rankings 2018: top 10

2018 rank2017 rankInstitutionCity State
12Harvard UniversityCambridgeMA
25Columbia UniversityNew YorkNY
=33Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyCambridgeMA
=31Stanford UniversityStanfordCA
57Duke UniversityDurhamNC
66Yale UniversityNew HavenCT
712California Institute of TechnologyPasadenaCA
84University of PennsylvaniaPhiladelphiaPA
99Princeton UniversityPrincetonNJ
108Cornell Univ
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